We like a great deal of things about the Brother’s HL-4200CN, however its prints of photographs had a few issues, and print velocities were a touch moderate. Shading representation looked dim, with observably sloppy hues and some loss of fine detail, while dark scale photographs looked grainy and needed subtle element. Content Also Appeared too overwhelming and marginally shadowy in spots. We’ve seen more-appealing content and shading design from less-lavish models, however the majority of them neglected to print line craftsmanship as forcefully as the HL-4200CN did.

The HL-4200CN produced monochrome content at 16 pages for each moment. That is somewhat speedier than the normal of the as of late tried shading lasers – and likely sufficiently quick for most circumstances. It printed shading representation at 2.2 ppm, the which is 1.5 ppm slower than our test-set normal.

The HL-4200CN positions particularly high on client experience. Its control board has up, down, left, and right bolts, so you can not get lost exploring the LCD’s menus, particularly with the assistance of its unmistakable prompts. Sibling incorporates two drivers: PC World tried the yield quality and execution with its PostScript driver; yet Brother incorporates its own drivers also, and this one Provides some surprising and helpful elements missing from PostScript variant. For instance, Brother’s driver Gives you the capacity to decrease a picture and print 4, 9, 16, 25, or 36 duplicates of it on a page – a convenient trap for printing business cards, spot cards, or other little things. Another surprising and valuable element is the driver Margin Shift, the which gives you a chance to change the situation of a topsy turvy page without changing the first record. Taking a lesson from easy to understand ink plane printers, Brother Also planned the driver to caution you and offer to adjust your mix-up on the off chance that you pick clashing settings, for example, attempting to create booklets without turning on duplex printing for twofold sided prints. One somewhat powerless spot as far as Brother can tell is documentation: The HL-4200CN accompanies a useful printed setup aide and an intensive on-screen manual, however you need to wade through a tempest of various printed things that ought to have been a piece of a play manual.